Crime & Safety

Hi-Tech App Pinpoints Active Shooters And Critical Incidents

The phone application's graphics change in real time, depending on the situation

Editor's note - This story is about an active shooter drill held at Central Regional High School last August. Berkeley Township police participated. The story details the phone application introduced by Ocean County Prosecutor Joseph D. Coronato. The application pinpoints activity in every room in the school and connects police, fire and emergency responders by a tap on a key pad. The story certainly bears repeating in these dark times.

BAYVILLE, NJ - The boy on the floor was already dead. Nearby lay a teenage girl, hit by an active shooter in a Central Regional High School hallway, that was littered with shotgun shells.

Berkeley Township police arrived first. They had to leave the students there, as they made a left into another hallway. Their first mission was to "neutralize" whoever had shot the students. Their second mission was to rescue the victims. Then the Ocean County Swat Team would take over.

Find out what's happening in Berkeleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Fortunately, the scene at Central Regional that morning was a drill, to demonstrate the new "Critical Response Group" phone application introduced by Ocean County Prosecutor Joseph D. Coronato.

All of the information first responders, including police departments, first aid squads, fire companies and other emergency responders will ever need in an emergency is all logged into the application which can be accessed by a touch on a key pad.

Find out what's happening in Berkeleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.


All of the information of a particular building, which is usually found in voluminous documents in file cabinets in school and public buildings, is already programmed in the phone application in visual aids, Coronato said.

That eliminates confusion in an emergency, when seconds count, where police may be unfamiliar with the building or area they are entering. First responders can also communicate in real time. The graphics will also change in real time, as the situation progresses.

"This technology is the result of the United States Military Operations Command spending more than a decade and billions of dollars fighting the global war on terror,' Coronato said. "It is the concept of the NFL playbook taken to an astonishing level and I plan to maximize its utilitization."

The cost to purchase the program from BAE Systems, Inc. for each town or district is minimal, around $3,000. The cost is paid for with drug forfeiture funds, he said.

Participating agencies already involved in the program include:
Central Regional, Jackson, Manchester, Stafford, Toms River High Schools and the Berkeley Township school districts. The Brick Township and Point Pleasant Beach school districts are in the initial phase of participation, said Al Della Fave, spokesman for the Ocean County Prosecutor's Office.

The sprawling Central Regional High School - which Superintendent Triantafillos Parlapanides once dubbed "the biggest ranch house in Ocean County" was selected as one of the first districts due to its size.

The application insure that emergency responders are no longer hampered by poor communication and lack of coordination between agencies, Coronato said.
Photo: Patricia A. Miller
Video: Courtesy of Ocean County Prosecutor's Office

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.